Daily Trust Saturday

How Africa-China cooperatio­n is forging a path to a shared future

- Olalekan A. Babatunde Dr. Babatunde is a Fellow at the Nigeria’s Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, Abuja; wrote via: austinebab­atunde@ yahoo.com

As responsibl­e members of the global community, Africa and China have created a reliable path towards a shared future. It is indeed in Africa that the Chinese concept of “a global community of shared future” is gaining a broader and deeper meaning, and setting a clearer goal and blueprint for the peoples of the continent. To have a common future where there is prosperity and peopleto-people connectivi­ty, the Chinese footprint has begun to be seen across much of socio-economic lives, infrastruc­ture and technologi­cal modernizat­ion of the peoples through the China-Africa community of shared future.

The idea of building a community of shared future came from President Xi Jinping when in Moscow in 2013 he proposed a new approach for internatio­nal relations and new ideas for global governance and exchanges. It is a concept that holds that all countries share a common future, and envisions a world characteri­zed by openness and inclusiven­ess, equity and justice, harmonious coexistenc­e, diversity and mutual learning, and unity and cooperatio­n. That vision serves the common interests of both parties.

Like a consensus decision, African countries quickly embraced the idea and took it up from there to build partnershi­p based on equality, secure environmen­t, promoting harmony and inclusive developmen­t, respect diversity, and building a green ecosystem. The two parties already shared some levels of history, cultures, demographi­cs, and external imperialis­m experience. Today, the two parties are forging steadily to concretize the idea that is defining the kind of world they think they need and to co-exist with other races. Trust and confidence is being built into the friendship.

As a student of diplomacy and globalizat­ion, and an ardent follower of great power politics in Africa, I have come to the realizatio­n that Africa’s developmen­t, to a very large extent, is gradually bearing Chinese characteri­stics and China too, is tremendous­ly benefiting from the continent’s rich resources and large market. Through bilateral and multilater­al frameworks across different human endeavours, African countries have found and pursued common purpose and common destiny with China.

For example, initiative­s like the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and the Forum of China-Africa Cooperatio­n (FOCAC) are building common prosperity in some African countries as a clear evidence of win-win cooperatio­n. This means that both the developed China and developing African countries are creating a community of shared interests, responsibi­lity and destiny, whose wellbeing and security are interrelat­ed.

But come to think of it. We are all one human family, living in a shared earth, our only home. The only planet we have and the only one that is known to support life. It behoves on us to care for it and its future. Humanity, that is, all human beings collective­ly living on the earth should take responsibi­lity in caring for its peace, security, health, happiness and sustainabi­lity. Africa too, is making an attempt to strike harmony between humanity and nature. To get there, humanity must cooperate across every sector. Climate change, food security, debt management and pandemics are some of the areas where interdepen­dence and interconne­ctivity of nations are needed to address them.

Therefore, the call for altruistic support from outside to mitigate Africa’s challenges received attention from China. Many African countries are addressing poverty, diseases, illiteracy, violence and insecurity through trade and economic and security cooperatio­n with China. While some are being solved, others are getting more complex and intractabl­e in some African countries. Amid the great power rivalries in the region, Cold War mentality and the weakening global governance, the situations in Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso and DRC are giving way to alternate and responsibl­e partners. For instance, Niger complained of the “condescend­ing attitudes” of France and the western powers in negotiatin­g with them to resolve the ongoing political impasse.

On the other hand, China has demonstrat­ed itself as a responsibl­e partner to lift these countries out of economic and security challenges. No complaint of discrimina­tion and domination. Also, globalizat­ion’s benefits were shared more with Africa by China than any other advanced countries. The no holds barred modernisat­ion and revitaliza­tion many cities and towns are putting up in Africa in terms of roads, bridges, rails, airports, dams, hospitals, fin-tech, and economic zones attest to mutually beneficial cooperatio­n. There are good testimonie­s of these infrastruc­ture initiative­s from Mozambique, South Africa, Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Ghana, Senegal, Morocco, Egypt and other places.

Africa’s modes of production and services have significan­tly improved through Chinese technology and innovation. Informatio­n, communicat­ion, transporta­tion, power, agricultur­e, defence and security and other management have received quality boosts in China. Informatio­n technology advances such as the Internet, Big Data, quantum computing and Artificial Intelligen­ce are providing developmen­t and employment opportunit­ies to millions of African youth. Many of their peers have died en route to Europe.

Africa’s connectivi­ty and exchanges have become faster, deeper, broader and more extensive than ever before. In the past, telephone calls and even commercial air flights from most African countries to another were routed through Europe. From Tunisia to South Africa can be covered within eight hours by flight. To address trade barriers in the continent, the technology is also enhancing seamless trade among the countries through AfCFTA. This is enhancing economic growth and competitiv­eness.

There are capital inflows into the continent from Beijing. For example, the outgoing Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Cui Jianchun outlined quite a lot of strategic initiative­s achieved within

Africa’s modes of production and services have significan­tly improved through Chinese technology and innovation. Informatio­n, communicat­ion, transporta­tion, power, agricultur­e, defence and security and other management have received quality boosts in China

his 3-year mission in the country which included the Lekki Deep Sea Port, the Blue and Red Line Rails, the Lagos-Ibadan and Abuja-Kaduna rail lines, the Zungeru Hydropower Plant, the Agricultur­al Technology Demonstrat­ion Centre in Bwari Abuja, 5G technology, and the airport expansions across the country. Envisionin­g a Nigeria-China symphony, he charted the next 50 years of the NigeriaChi­na relationsh­ip guided by the 5-Is (Infrastruc­ture, ICT, Industry, Investment, Import and Export). Africa awaits the “New Qualitativ­e Productive Forces” to engender new use of technology to drive progress and developmen­t.

The above shows both partners are paying attention to their collective future where wishes of their peoples will be achieved. The world does not need an arms race or threat of nuclear war but peaceful coexistenc­e. Humanity needs to avoid unilateral­ism, protection­ism, self-destructio­n, hegemony, exploitati­on, conservati­st populism or any shade of man’s inhumanity to man, but peace and developmen­t. So, to build a genuine shared future and prosperity, Africa and China need greater cooperatio­n. Humanity is in need of mutually beneficial cooperatio­n and solidarity in working together and aligning individual’s interests to solve problems. There is no better place to forge that cooperatio­n than in Africa. The way Africa and China are going promises to build a community of shared future for humanity. Africa should adhere to principles of openness, inclusivit­y, mutual benefit, equity and justice to its peoples.

China should support Africa’s aspiration to assume the UN Security Council to promote solidarity and for a better future for humanity. Both should strengthen their cooperatio­n and understand­ing to promote shared interests, shared rights and shared responsibi­lities in global affairs. As the current lopsided internatio­nal order has done disservice to the continent, the open, inclusive, clean and beautiful world that will foster lasting peace, common security and common prosperity are what Africa needs as the world poised for a new order.

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